That’s not in my American history book, by Thomas Ayres

This book is a compilation of people and incidents in American history that most people either don’t know about, or have learned incorrect information about. These short essays range in time from before the founding of the country, up to about the most recent turn of the century. Ayres is an investigative reporter, so he Read More

America Walks into a Bar, by Christine Sismondo

This is a fairly comprehensive look at drinking establishments from before the Revolution through Prohibition and up to the more recent past. The author had a little fun with the book and chapter titles. The chapters track the bar’s evolution: from A Pilgrim Walks into a Bar, to A Crusader Walks into a Bar, and Read More

Plentiful Country, by Tyler Anbinder

This book works to disprove the long accepted idea that the Irish who came to America fleeing the Potato Famine arrived as unskilled labor, and remained at the lowest rungs of society for the rest of their lives. Anbinder, with help from a number of assistants, undertook a ten year study, and this book is Read More

Brought Forth on This Continent, by Harold Holzer

This is a Lincoln biography, but with a specific focus. The subtitle of the book is “Abraham Lincoln and American Immigration”. Most of the biographies of Lincoln that I have read, and I certainly have not read them all, focus mainly on his early years, and then the years in the White House in the Read More

National Pastime, by Martin C Babicz & Thomas W Zeiler

The subtitle of this book is, “U.S. History Through Baseball”. And that is indeed what this book describes. Each chapter starts with a few paragraphs about a short period of U. S. history, and the rest of the chapter talks about baseball history during that same time span. I had not realized it before, but Read More

A Short History of the Railroad, by Christian Wolmar

I had thought that this book would cover the history of the American railroad system, and it does. However, it also covers the history of railroad systems around the world. So, the level of information is in some cases very broad, but not terribly deep. Having said that, I did learn a couple of things Read More

American Aristocrats, by Harry S Stout

The author tracks the Anderson family, starting with the patriarch, Richard Clough Anderson, through the next two generations. This was made easier by two things – there is a lot of correspondence between the family members, and a few other individuals, that is still extant, and this family was acquainted with, or was distantly related Read More

Murder Between the Lines, by Radha Vatsal

This is the second, and so far last book, about Kitty Weeks. The first was “A Front Page Affair”, which I posted about in February of 2022. Kitty is still working as a reporter for the Ladies’ Page of a New York newspaper, and still living in a grand apartment with her wealthy father, still Read More

Diamonds and Deadlines, by Betsy Prioleau

This is a biography of a woman I had never heard of, although I was familiar with her husband’s name. Nothing unusual there, especially since this woman lived in the late 19th century. And the reason I had heard of her husband is also the reason she was able to become wealthy and well-known.in her Read More